Katheryn Speck said she used to be a Canadian nationalist, travelled the world with a maple leaf on her backpack and once lived in Quebec so she could become fluently bilingual.

But on Saturday she was among hundreds of people who rallied at the Alberta Legislature to support separation from Canada, with many in the crowd waving Alberta flags and a few even displaying the U.S. Stars and Stripes.

“I thought it was a beautiful, fantastic country. But now I’m so disappointed. I’m literally crushed that we’ll never be represented in this country and there’s never a chance of changing the government,” Speck said.

Earlier this week, Premier Danielle Smith’s government proposed legislation that would lower the bar for holding a referendum.

  • acargitz@lemmy.ca
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    6 hours ago

    “Once the votes are counted in Ontario, the election is over. We don’t matter. We never matter,” she said.

    You know what Quebeckers do that’s smart? They don’t have party loyalty. One election, they vote NDP, next one BQ, next LPC, sometimes they give CPC some seats to push them over the edge. We make every single party want to cater to us. We aren’t in anyone’s pocket.

    Do you want to matter? Stop being a fucking CPC stooge.

    • NGram@lemmy.ca
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      4 hours ago

      Nobody won a rally, it’s just a headline that can be parsed to get more than one meaning. I presume this is the correct parsing:

      (Subject) [verb] {object}

      (Albertans ‘crushed’ by Liberal election win) [rally] {to separate from Canada}

      or phrased less ambiguously:

      Albertans who were ‘crushed’ by the Liberals winning the election went to a rally about separating from Canada

  • AGM@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    I was relieved that the CPC didn’t form government, but we’re still in a lot of danger. Spend any time on X and you can see a full court press going on with propaganda to push Alberta separatism. The same stuff is going on now in Alberta that took place in Crimea prior to 2014, and the online media ecosystem is American. I see a lot of people stating Alberta couldn’t separate because of the treaties, but when a powerful country decides they don’t care about the laws, the courts aren’t going to save you.

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    1 day ago

    “Never been represented” forgets that there were ten years of conservative government before the liberal one.

    Are they for real, or are they always this delusional?

    • dankm@lemmy.ca
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      14 hours ago

      But those were Ontario conservatives, not good God fearing Alberta conservatives.

      The UCP didn’t win the federal election, so they wanna separate.

      • Tiger666@lemmy.ca
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        11 hours ago

        The UCP are fascist apologists, so they want to align themselves with Herr Drumpf. Ftfy

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      1 day ago

      Conservatives tend to live in an eternal now- what’s good for me now? This explains why they don’t care about hypocrisy.

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    1 day ago

    I had to read to the bottom for the best part:

    “We have the oil, we have the resources. We’re fine,” Westernaier said, noting she believed Monday’s election was rigged.

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    “I thought it was a beautiful, fantastic country. But now I’m so disappointed. I’m literally crushed that we’ll never be represented in this country and there’s never a chance of changing the government,” Speck said.

    What the fuck. It was only 10 years ago that Conservatives were in power.

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    2 days ago

    Call me crazy, but I don’t want nationalists in this country, full stop. We can love and respect our nation without being worked into a blind, fervent frenzy.

    People are real quick to point out that the Nazi’s had “socialist” in their party name, and real fuckin’ slow to pick up that it was preceded by “national.”

    • 9488fcea02a9@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      I think the actual term you’re looking for is federalist

      I think it was the subject of the article who described herself as nationalist

      • Glide@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        I am not.

        Nationalist:

        a person who strongly identifies with their own nation and vigorously supports its interests, especially to the exclusion or detriment of the interests of other nations.

        Federalist:

        a person who advocates or supports a system of government in which several states unite under a central authority.

        Both pulled from the OxfordLanguages dictionary that Google uses.

        And, of course, Nazi is short for the German pronunciation of “National Socialist.”

        The problem is not a belief in government. The problem is in the belief that there is something intrinsically better about your nation that gives you justification to look down on other nations. Fuck nationalism.

    • CobraChicken3000@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      I always believed that nationalism stemmed from the idea of the innate superiority of your nation over the others. Which I find incredibly problematic for obvious reasons. Now patriotism, on the other hand, I believe is something that we all should strive for.

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    2 days ago

    “I thought it was a beautiful, fantastic country. But now I’m so disappointed. I’m literally crushed that we’ll never be represented in this country and there’s never a chance of changing the government,” Speck said.

    Maybe you could just campaign for electoral reform instead of separating? Since you’re landlocked and all? These people are idiots.

  • Rainbowblite@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Why is their sense of national unity tied to the success of an industry? Will PEI vote to separate because Canadians aren’t eating enough potatoes?

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      6 hours ago

      They are so brainwashed it boggles the mind. Alberta could be a solar energy powerhouse, they could build shit, develop a manufacturing sector, but no, it has to be fucking oil and gas forever.

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        4 hours ago

        Oil and Gas forever, but also won’t build local infrastructure to fully use it, and instead have to ship it elsewhere to refine it etc.

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      6 hours ago

      I’ve heard the PEI separatists are calling for a high speed potato-conveyor tube to transport potatoes for shippment to China.

      They’ll call it the Trans Canada Potatube. And it’ll only cost $35 billion and never recoup it’s costs.

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    2 days ago

    It’s a shame that no-one was there to identify these people.

    We could have sent them all American immigration forms to fill out.

    Or better yet, fill out and submit those forms for them. Along with Canadian citizenship renunciation forms.

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    2 days ago

    This all has remarkable parallels from the Anschluss between Germany and Austria in the 20s and 30s. There was support for it in the 20s, but Hitler said Austria should join with Germany and how wonderful it would be. He used agents to influence pro-unification. Some Austrians agreed, and even tried an coup to overthrow the government and join with Germany.

    In 1938 Austria was finally bullied into holding a referendum, but it looked like the outcome would be against unification. Hitler marched his armies in to Austria less than 24 hours before the referendum and annexed the country.

    It was 5 years after he rose to power in 1933.

    Trump will come for us, and it’ll be traitors like this that give him the excuse to do it.

    • LycanGalen@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Hitler marched his armies in to Austria less than 24 hours before the referendum and annexed the country.

      Based on your account, annexing Austria before the referendum indicates Hitler didn’t need an excuse. Not marching would have saved resources, but clearly he was going to take it regardless. I doubt Trump will need an excuse either - if that’s what he intends to do.

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        If you could mobilize 1000 people to achieve your goals instead of 10000 people, why would you mobilize the 10000? And if the 1000 doesn’t work, trying only costs you 10% more than not trying and then having to go with the more expensive option. And coming in before the result that would delegitimize your claim is simply pragmatic.

        The same as Hitler, Trump won’t need an excuse, but why would he choose the more expensive option? Now we’re talking about Trump, so well thought out plans aren’t the norm, but he does like to save a buck…

        • Someone@lemmy.ca
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          1 day ago

          Average population per riding federally is about 108000 (2021 numbers). For Nova Scotia it’s about 88000. AB, BC, and ON are all around 115000 and Quebec is pretty much the only one right on the average.

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              1 day ago

              It is what it is, I’m not complaining, but your MPs represent less people than average. NS isn’t even that disproportionate, PEI and the territories are way worse.

              MPs/100,000 people
              BC 0.86
              AB 0.87
              SK 1.24
              MB 1.04
              ON 0.86
              QC 0.92
              NB 1.29
              NS 1.13
              PE 2.59
              NL 1.37
              YT 2.49
              NT 2.43
              NU 2.71
              Canadian average 0.93

              If you want to argue whether or not population is actually a good measure of over/under representation that’s fine, but you can’t argue some people’s votes count more or less than others.

              • PlaidBaron@lemmy.world
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                1 day ago

                That makes more sense. I genuinely didnt understand what you were getting at with your previous numbers. This isnt Reddit. It was a genuine question.

                But yes, I would argue that Alberta has more actual influence due to its far greater economy. Oil money brings with it influence. We shouldnt pretend Canada is above that.

                Nova Scotia simpy isnt that big a player in day to day decision making at the federal level. There isnt as much at stake.